Ice-cold Hounds thumped by Northeastern State

December 18, 2010

Dave Wagner

Sometimes teams play like they practice; sometimes not.

For Eastern New Mexico University’s men on Saturday, a good week of practice didn’t lead to the desired result in the game. The Greyhounds struggled to shoot 30 percent from the floor, were outrebounded 44-34 and absorbed a 79-57 Lone Star Conference men’s crossover shellacking from Northeastern State at Greyhound Arena.

ENMU (3-6), which lost its fourth in a row, hung around for a half despite its scoring problems. When that continued after the break, though, the RiverHawks (5-5) pulled away and made short work of it.

Coach Andrew Helton was thoroughly disappointed with the outing.

“We stunk,” he said. “We practiced really well this week, and you hope to play like you practice.

“Honestly, I think we made just two perimeter jump shots in the first 30 minutes of the game. Whatever we got was inside, but eventually you have to knock down some jumpers.”

The RiverHawks also struggled through the first half, leading 33-28 at the break. Although they probably should have had a bigger margin, they eventually came alive and turned the game into a runaway with a 16-2 burst after ENMU pulled to 35-33 early in the second half.

“I thought our energy level was good in practice (during the week),” Helton said. “It was terrible in the second half. But some of that falls on your ability to make jumpers.”

Northeastern, which won for the first time in five road outings, shot 57 percent in the second half (17-of-30), including 7-of-15 from 3-point range.

“I thought our defense was solid all night,” NSU coach Larry Gipson said. “In the second half we started making some shots, but I think our defense caused them some problems.”

“I’m pleased with this win,” said Gipson, who like Helton is a native of Marion, Ohio. “Nobody else has come in here and beaten Eastern like that. I think Eastern has a good basketball team, and Andrew will get them going.”